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- From: bell@beethoven.cs.unc.edu (Andrew Bell)
- Date: 9 Mar 92 18:35:46 GMT
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,misc.legal,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: Re: Legal Cocaine? (WAS Re: Drug legalization)
-
- In article <1992Mar5.660665.6F0o5@infopls.chi.il.us> zane@infopls.chi.il.us (Sameer Parekh) writes:
- > I read in _Licit + Illicit Drugs_ that the people living in the
- >Andes who chewed coca leaves to deal with the thin air had no trouble
- >stopping use once they moved to a more airy clime.
-
- People interested in checking further into this might be interested in
- a couple of articles about coca leaf chewing:
-
- -------
-
- A. Barnett, R. Hawks, and R. Resnick. "Cocaine Pharmacokinetics in Humans."
- The Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 3 (1981) 353-366.
-
- "Therefore, on the basis of this new information that has come as a result
- of technological development we can conclude with a pratical observation.
- The size of the quid of coca leaves that can be comfortably accomodated by
- a person is such that it is unlikely that coca chewing, as practiced for
- centuries in places like Macchu Piccu, presents the dangers that may result
- from the modern forms of recreational use."
-
- Particularly interesting about this article is that the report came out of
- the Division of Research of the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
-
- -------
-
- A. Weil. "The Therapeutic Value of Coca in Contemporary Medicine."
- The Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 3 (1981) 367-376.
-
- "I have lived among coca-using Indians of the Andes and the Amazon basin
- in Columbia and Peru and have not seen any signs of physical deterioration
- attributable to the leaf. I have never seen an instance of coca toxicity.
- Nor have I observed physiological or psychological dependence on coca.
- Even life-long chewers seem able to get the effect they want from the
- same dose over time; there is no development of tolerance and certainly
- no withdrawal syndrome upon sudden discontinuance of use."
-
- -------
-
- -Andrew Bell
- bell@cs.unc.edu
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: cam@castle.ed.ac.uk (Chris Malcolm)
- Newsgroups: uk.misc,soc.culture.british
- Subject: Re: Druggies - so they die, who cares (was: Must restaurants provide water?)
- Message-ID: <37266@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 14 Jun 93 21:38:49 GMT
-
- In article <1993Jun14.134030.385@sco.com> charless@sco.COM (charless) writes:
-
- >the interesting factoids about who the addicts were back in the
- >1920's, when heroin use for recreational purposes was still
- >legal.
-
- My grandfather, like many medical doctors of his time (and like Freud)
- was a cocaine addict. It caused him no problems at all as far as we
- could see, or he reported, and he always claimed that without the
- cocaine he would have been an alcoholic. He died at the age of 96,
- shortly after his third wife had died on him, and it would seem
- because he was fed up with living so long. In those days in Britain
- addicts could register with the NHS, and thus there were no black
- market profits to be made on illegal drugs, and no pushers. The drug
- problems all started when we became sanctimonious about these addicts
- on the NHS, kicked them off, and just like the US before us, created
- the whole apalling modern drug scene of criminality, pushers, and drug
- barons.
- --
- Chris Malcolm cam@uk.ac.ed.aifh +44 (0)31 650 3085
- Department of Artificial Intelligence, Edinburgh University
- 5 Forrest Hill, Edinburgh, EH1 2QL, UK DoD #205
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: dolphin@ziggys.cts.com (Rex Kahler) 619/262-6384
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Winston Churchill and Cocaine Gum....
- Message-ID: <3VB6Lc7w165w@ziggys.cts.com>
- Date: Tue, 10 May 94 22:32:01 PDT
-
- (from the 8may94 san diego union-tribune)
- (xscribed wholly w/o permission)
-
-
-
- Experts push legalization of cocaine gum to wean addicts
-
- By DAN FREEDMAN
- Hearst News Service
-
- WASHINGTON -- Quenn Victoria did it. Winston Churchill in his
- youth did it, and millions of peasant farmers in South America
- do it. So why not allow it in America?
- Why not let people chew on low-potency cocaine lozenges or
- gum?
- "Millions have used these products, and we have no evidence
- of harm associated with it," says Ethan Nadelmann, a professor
- at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of International
- and Public Affairs.
- "It may be less addictive than coffee."
- Nadelmann and others who advocate changing the government's
- zero-tolerance approach to drugs want to create a weakened
- version of cocaine that could be sold over the counter as a
- substitute for the hard stuff.
- Then potential consumers would have an alternative to crack
- cocaine, which is smoked, and high-purity regular cocaine,
- which is snorted, the way beer and wine are alternatives to
- high-proof vodka.
- The idea of marketing cocaine-lite is not making much head-
- way at a time when the American public is fearful of crime and
- when the crime bill moving through Congress is promising more
- prisons and punishment for drug offenders.
- But raising the possibility of such a product goes to the
- core of the debate over the best way to undercut criminal drug
- enterprises.
- Nadelmann and others argue that low-potency cocaine might
- draw potential customers away from drug-trafficking organiza-
- tions smuggling tons of cocaine from South America and violent
- street gangs peddling crack.
- "If some people want to distill those products down to
- something more potent, let them," Nadelmann wrote in an edi-
- torial with _Rolling Stone_ Publisher Jann Wenner in the May 5
- issue of the magazine. "But most people won't want to buy it."
- However, Herbert Kleber, a psychiatrist and a White House
- anti-drug official in the Bush administration, says low-potency
- cocaine would not undercut criminal drug gangs because no one
- would use it as an alternative.
- Now a vice president of Columbia University's Center on
- Addiction and Substance Abuse, Kleber calls the idea of a
- cocaine substitute "scientifically naive," adding that it
- "totally misunderstands the reason why people use and misuse
- drugs."
- Kleber compares the temptation of low-potency cocaine for
- the uninitiated or the recovering addict with his experience
- in quitting smoking.
- "I smoked for 25 years and if i have just one, I'm back to
- two packs a day," he said. "It's the same with low-dose co-
- caine."
- Dr. Andrew Weil of the University of Arizona medical school
- disagrees.
- He says the widespread chewing of coca leaves among Andean
- peasants suggests that, in low dosages, cocaine is not addic-
- tive.
- Weil also says that the product is good for treating stomach
- ailments and motion sickness.
- "It's a shame that we've made disappear from our world a
- form of a drug that has a whole bunch of benefits," Weil says.
- Watered-down cocaine was common in turn-of-the-century Amer-
- ica and Europe. Recently uncovered records in Scotland suggest
- that Queen Victoria and her young house guest, Winston Churchill,
- consumed cocaine-filled lozenges for sore throats and other
- maladies contracted while staying at Balmoral Castle.
- At the same time, cocaine was an ingredient of Coca-Cola and
- several varieties of patent medicines sold in America. All that
- changed in 1914 with the Harrison Act, which banned cocaine
- without a prescription.
- Drug-law defenders say cocaine was banned because it is
- dangerously addictive.
- "There are some genies you can't let out of teh bottle,"
- Kleber says.
- Low-potency cocaine differs from regular cocaine powder and
- crack in terms of its purity level, and how fast and thoroughly
- it alters brain chemistry.
- According to Weil, the coca leaf chewed by peasant farmers
- in Bolivia and Peru is half of 1 percent pure cocaine. By con-
- trast, cocaine smuggled in by traffickers is 50 percent to 60
- percent pure.
- The effect of crack is even more intense because it is
- smoked and its chemicals reach the brain in seconds. Cocaine
- inhaled through the nose takes 30 minutes to be fully effec-
- tive. Orally ingested cocaine in lozenges or gum takes an hour,
- according to Kleber.
- John Gregich of the White House Office of National Drug
- Control Policy argues that "the notion you can create a safe
- stimulant out of something as addictive as cocaine doesn't
- match our experience."
- Still, the University of Arizona's Weil notes that decades
- of tough law enforcement measures against drug traffickers and
- dealers have "made worse what we want to make better, destroying
- the peasant society of South America and creating the crack
- culture in American cities."
-
-
- ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** *****
-
-
-
- back beneath the waves
- D o l p h i n R e x
- /s\
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: Anonymous <nobody@nowhere>
- Subject: Intranasal Cocaine Administration
-
- insofar as cocaine use is concerned, i have - after many years of
- foolishly self-destructive behavior - discovered a very nice way
- to do coke. take a nasal decongestant sprayer bottle, empty it.
- take a small amount of powdered cocaine - 1/4 to 1/2 a gram - and
- dissolve it in maybe a cubic inch of water. add a drop or two of
- vodka or other ethanol. stir it. the cocaine dissolves into the
- water, leaving the cut(s) on the bottom, a side benefit i didn't
- originally anticipate. pour the solution - a 7% solution, if i may
- offer a nickname - into yon vile vial, and apply to your nasal
- cavities, judiciously.
-
- if overfilled, you will get a jet of solution. otherwise, you get a
- nice mix of solution and air in a mist that dissolves easily into
- your nasal passages, with consequent bodily effects approximately
- equivalent to a cup of coffee. this is advantageous for many, many
- reasons ...
-
- (a) no waste. you get exactly what your body can absorb, and
- no crumbs clinging to your nasal passages and falling down
- your front. you don't get so much that the effect borders
- on toxicity, as you do when doing lines. and you can make
- a 1/2 gram last up to a week, in this fashion.
-
- (b) no paraphernalia. this fits nicely into a night bag with
- toothbrush or toothpaste, and is bust-free, in the car, on
- one's person, at one's desk, or crossing international
- borders. no razors, no straws, no mirrors, no 'bullets' or
- little brown vials waiting to fall out of your pocket.
-
- (c) no addictive sequence. it's much easier to forego tooting
- when using at this level, and put it aside for the night,
- instead of staying up 'til the wee hours. and it combines
- with being productive about the same way that coffee does.
- ( i have also applied small amounts of methamphetamine in
- this fashion, with similar low-impact effects. )
-
- It's really a shame that the Establishment doesn't apply itself to teaching
- people how to use drugs intelligently and creatively, since, clearly, such
- paths to competence and maturity exist. If I had known ten years ago what I
- have learned through much reading and thinking, I would have saved myself a
- lot of money, and, more importantly, a lot of grief and self-destructive
- behavior which I have, fortunately, survived.
-
- Please perpetuate this information as widely as possible, the better to teach
- people how to avoid addictive behavioral sequences while continuing to explore
- the realms of awareness in a mature and thoughtful manner.
-